Komentáře •

  • @pocoapoco2
    @pocoapoco2 Před 6 lety +158

    your description of a schmitt trigger isn't very good. A schmitt trigger changes the switching thershhold voltage in the other direction of the output voltage whenever the output gets switched.. That prevents any signal which is close to the switching voltage from switching on and off rapidly due to noise or a small changing signal.

    • @arduinoversusevil2025
      @arduinoversusevil2025 Před 6 lety +273

      Wait, you mean to say it's not ACTUALLY a pixie pregnancy test?!

    • @sasabarisic8864
      @sasabarisic8864 Před 6 lety +21

      It's not entirely wrong either. I use one to trigger a mosfet with a photoresistor. Without it it's a great burn-your-house-down-at-sunset-or-sunrise timer.

    • @tb2187
      @tb2187 Před 6 lety +32

      Does anyone give a Schmitt or two?

    • @LunaticCharade
      @LunaticCharade Před 6 lety +3

      Derek N. Eder yeah probably not totally correct there either but, you get the general idea.
      Amplify the shit out if the signal, threshold it to get a nicer blinkenlight and then do something to also get sound.

    • @psaunier10
      @psaunier10 Před 6 lety +15

      I bet your a blast at parties.

  • @ElectroBOOM
    @ElectroBOOM Před 6 lety +440

    You call me young?! how old are you?!

    • @lomparti
      @lomparti Před 4 lety +22

      Older than Jesus when he was a cowboy. lol

    • @zerg9523
      @zerg9523 Před 4 lety +29

      Hey, but he complimented the eyebrows, thats a win... right?

    • @brandonbenjamin9452
      @brandonbenjamin9452 Před 4 lety +3

      The Rustiest Shackleford oof

    • @_milo590
      @_milo590 Před 4 lety +11

      All we know about uncle bumblefuck is that he’s older than carprentry itsblelf

    • @Ian-ff2hz
      @Ian-ff2hz Před 4 lety

      Lol electroboom

  • @MrMarkraffaele
    @MrMarkraffaele Před 6 lety +213

    love the ergometric design of your home made version. it looks like the perfect hand held shape that you can hold for hours

    • @act.13.41
      @act.13.41 Před 6 lety +7

      Natural ergonomics

    • @GashimahironChl
      @GashimahironChl Před 6 lety +22

      Really? my experience with that shape is that you can't hold it up for much over 5 minutes!

    • @jaredmurray9868
      @jaredmurray9868 Před 4 lety +3

      @@GashimahironChl You must have replaced the 9 volt dry cell with a 12 volt deep cycle....

    • @elena6516
      @elena6516 Před 3 lety +2

      smells something fierce though after a long day's work

    • @snap-off5383
      @snap-off5383 Před 3 lety +2

      "feels good in the hand".

  • @wargamingrefugee9065
    @wargamingrefugee9065 Před 6 lety +558

    That's the trouble with the Liberal Industrial Establishment, it takes jobs away from hard working Americans. Back in my day, we used to call a non-contact voltage tester an apprentice.

    • @SuperDd40
      @SuperDd40 Před 6 lety +13

      good one rofl

    • @nightmarecuiture
      @nightmarecuiture Před 6 lety

      :(

    • @censusgary
      @censusgary Před 6 lety +12

      I know a former licensed electrician who tests voltage by putting wires in his mouth and seeing how it feels.
      I’m serious. I couldn’t make that up if I tried.

    • @randallshular5362
      @randallshular5362 Před 6 lety +5

      WarGamingRefugee YEP to that comment, and have them get conduit strechers, and go find a left hand screwdriver. Lol

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc Před 6 lety +3

      A bucket of prop wash. A tube of elbow grease.

  • @BobHolowenko
    @BobHolowenko Před 6 lety +144

    I adore the fact that he is drawing circuits and talking about voltage dividers while drawing them WITH a graphite voltage divider ...

  • @whollymindless
    @whollymindless Před 6 lety +495

    ElectroBOOM does not have eyebrows, he has *eyebrow*, singular and skookum as frig. He uses it in place of steel wool. I had hoped for a Big Clive reference to pliers of knowledge or at least use of unreasonable force..

    • @Dust76tr
      @Dust76tr Před 6 lety +18

      So close with the big Clive reference, but it’s the vice of knowledge 👍

    • @ClintMaas
      @ClintMaas Před 6 lety +17

      Fool bridge rectifier!!!!

    • @Hagledesperado
      @Hagledesperado Před 6 lety +22

      Yes, the vice of knowledge, the hammer of enlightenment and the pipe grips of perpetual inquisitiveness. Dunno what he calls his pliers though.

    • @zvpunry1971
      @zvpunry1971 Před 6 lety +15

      Hammer of enlightenment? Did you mean x-ray?
      czcams.com/video/DTsMdf5DaPU/video.html&t=4m46s

    • @kngofbng
      @kngofbng Před 6 lety +5

      The technical term is "unibrow."

  • @DEADB33F
    @DEADB33F Před 6 lety +126

    Careful you don't damage your multimeter using two red leads.
    You don't want +++'s going in both sides!

    • @TheChipmunk2008
      @TheChipmunk2008 Před 6 lety +13

      Yeah, he's right, makes the pixies REALLY angry

  • @glock2101
    @glock2101 Před 6 lety +39

    I wish I knew 10% of what AvE has forgotten over the years.

  • @taba1950
    @taba1950 Před 6 lety +28

    "You are the capacitor"
    Me: *blushes*

  • @TheArsonsmith4242
    @TheArsonsmith4242 Před 6 lety +5

    Thank you for the videos. Between you, MrPete222 and Abom79 and I now own a lathe and a Bridgeport. Neither of which I had ever used prior to starting watching your videos about a little over a year ago. I consider the 3 of you my experience, talent and curiosity. Keep up the great work and know you're effecting others with what you are doing. I'm adding to my plastics and woods hobby shop with a lot of machinist equipment and honing those skills.

  • @Markus__B
    @Markus__B Před 6 lety +59

    I appreciate your effort in explaining how these actually work.
    Wasted. I still am convinced that it´s JFM.

    • @somefuckstolemynick
      @somefuckstolemynick Před 6 lety +2

      Markus_B if you go deep enough it’s all JFM.

    • @cmans79tr7
      @cmans79tr7 Před 6 lety

      Explanation wasn't totally wasted on me because I just bought one of these and I was motivated to know how it worked, but I wasn't happy to hear that when I stick it in the socket "I" am electro charged. My heart skips beats as it is, I don't want to BE a capacitor. :-/

    • @cmans79tr7
      @cmans79tr7 Před 6 lety

      Crystal S. interesting. I guess then, when our heart beats, the electricity has to go somewhere, and that "somewhere" is the capacitance in the rest of our body? Still scary. I've seen capacitors blow!

  • @shannonsloan7246
    @shannonsloan7246 Před 5 lety +2

    I am a 12 year licensed journeyman electrician. I have owned many of those fluke hot sticks, hands-down the best option for under 600v noncontact meters. That was a little difficult to keep up with but then again maybe that’s because I was driving while watching. Well, that and there’s a big difference between electrical work and electronics work. At any rate well done sir.

  • @drewmurray2583
    @drewmurray2583 Před 6 lety +6

    One of those ticker testers saved me and my buddy's life at work one day. We were at Irving tissue in their switchgear room getting ready to add another section to the row of breaker racks. The Journeyman we were working under, along with a plant maintenance worker, disconnected the power and locked out the section we were to work on. Then we were given instructions to remove the side panels and remove the bolts holding the copper bus bars together to get ready for the new section. We got the covers all off and were getting the sockets and wrenches ready when I told my buddy "wait" and I pulled out my ticker pen just to make sure. That shit started ringing more than 12" away from the bars so I got out my meter and measured a full 600v across all phases. Turns out they cranked out the wrong breaker... Jeff was literally walking up to that thing with a wrench about to start working on those bus bars and I put my arm out to stop him when I said "wait". 1600amps 600v , about 30' from the exit, we would have been dead for sure!

    • @Tom-og7fi
      @Tom-og7fi Před 4 měsíci

      600 volts really how odd.

  • @nocarebear8301
    @nocarebear8301 Před 6 lety +115

    anyone else tilt their screen trying to make the reflection go away on the test meter? FAK!

  • @andrewbosak8941
    @andrewbosak8941 Před 6 lety +34

    Love the CZcams buddy reference

  • @henrituhola
    @henrituhola Před 6 lety

    It flashes happily when near a charge. You should get an industrial design award for this. I haven't seen more civilized use of hot glue and cardboard in CZcams.

  • @sparkyprojects
    @sparkyprojects Před 6 lety +56

    The original 'voltstick' only use one FET and 2 AA's, the gate of the fet going to a wire in the tip next to the led, so it was an open gate, didn't even need a pushbutton, very little to go wrong.
    sensitivity adjustment was bu placing a finger close to the tip to attenuate the signal.
    The Schmidt trigger is not exactly a square wave, as the voltage rises it 'toggles' to on, as it falls it toggles to off, there's a bit of hysteresis in the system too.

    • @allesklarklaus147
      @allesklarklaus147 Před 6 lety +4

      Sparky Projects The whole purpose of a schmitt trigger is to provide hysteresis to a basic comparator

    • @phils4634
      @phils4634 Před 6 lety +5

      Bad experiences (detection unreliability) with the original Fluke model. Acquired a Uni-Trend UT12A detector (via a colleague who's dad worked for Uni-Trend), and that's lasted years - VERY reliable, and acceptably sensitive (i.e. relatively immune from floating neutral false detection). Recently acquired the "new" gadget from Mustool - their MT812. Interesting in that this has a graded (LED bar-graph) response - sensitive enough to detect neutral return / low induced voltages (so useful for tracing "de-energised" cables), but also capable of discriminating between "live" and "induced voltages". Not enough experience to fully trust this for "last minute checking", but it seems as good as the old Uni-Trend for high(er) voltage detection. Any other "early adopters" out there for comments??

    • @8bluedge
      @8bluedge Před 6 lety +1

      Have you had any experience with Santronics testers? Being an electrician for the last 18 years I have found it to be very simple and sensitive.

    • @gard567
      @gard567 Před 6 lety

      santronics the best 17 yrs in business. no on/off switch VERY reliable

    • @thespiritof76..
      @thespiritof76.. Před 5 lety

      wowzer i justs had a nerdgazum

  • @lumberjackengineering2649
    @lumberjackengineering2649 Před 6 lety +41

    @2:25 just wanted to bring up a (sometimes forgotten) point here. Voltage dividers only work for things like microcontroller inputs/other high impedance situations/etc. You can't use them to drop the voltage to actually power anything that will draw any useful amount of current, since you need the current through the first resistor to be more or less equal to the current through the second resistor for the equation to be valid.

    • @arduinoversusevil2025
      @arduinoversusevil2025 Před 6 lety +12

      sure you can. I drive 12v solenoid valves off 24 volts all the time; two 12 volt marker bulbs in parallel wired in series with the coil. You can also use LEDs on high voltage with the right value resistor...

    • @arduinoversusevil2025
      @arduinoversusevil2025 Před 6 lety +5

      sorry, 2 24v bulbs.

    • @superbone8724
      @superbone8724 Před 6 lety +11

      Those two scenarios your describing aren't resistor dividers, those are current limiting resistors. the lightbulbs limit the current in the coil, and the resistor limits the current through the LED. Your idea in the video about powering a 5v device off of a 9 volt battery won't work if the device needs more than a few milliamps.

    • @lumberjackengineering2649
      @lumberjackengineering2649 Před 6 lety +9

      Yup, what the other gentlemen here have said. Let's go through an example here: Say you've got a load that draws 1 amp at 12 V, but you've only got a 24V power supply. Should be easy, right? Just wire up two resistors of the same value in series (for simplicity sake, say 1K Ohm each), and attach the load at the middle point between the two resistors, and all is good, right?
      But do the math and you'll see that everything is not good! Before you attach the load, you'll have 24V/(2K ohm) = 12mA of current through both of the resistors. Attach the load, and suddenly you'll need to pull an additional 1 Amp through *only* the first resistor, which isn't going to happen if you keep that resistor value at 1K and the supply voltage at 24V (since V=IR, if you wanted to keep a 12V drop across the first resistor, you'd need to drop the resistance value down to ~12ohm - and get a resistor rated for 12W heehee!).
      If you know that the current draw will *always* be constant, then you could make it work by doing the proper math ahead of time. But if your current draw varies (such as with a motor with varying loads, a bunch of LEDs that you've got a dimmer attached to, etc), a resistive divider just won't work well for you. That's why (along with efficiency/heat concerns) voltage regulators are used when you're going to be actually powering something with a lower-than-supply voltage.

    • @kilrahvp
      @kilrahvp Před 6 lety +4

      Rule of thumb is you want to pull no more than 1/10th of the current that goes through the whole divider on the center tap if you don't want to have to factor in the additional drop. Obviously that current shouldn't vary much.

  • @jokker03
    @jokker03 Před 6 lety +27

    holy shit, that book of resistors... that's a good fscking idea.

    • @TheDreamHazard
      @TheDreamHazard Před 6 lety +2

      fucking PRICELESS. I mean, you can buy them for a few bux, but the idea is priceless ;)

    • @pikachu.922
      @pikachu.922 Před 6 lety +2

      sporkfun ftw

    • @arduinoversusevil2025
      @arduinoversusevil2025 Před 6 lety +7

      Yes, fucking great. Waiting for caps and diodes...

    • @samilyas2123
      @samilyas2123 Před 6 lety +4

      I have the SMD version, the future is now old man

  • @owendodman3037
    @owendodman3037 Před 6 lety

    This is undoubtfully your best video yet

  • @cranbers
    @cranbers Před 4 lety

    I like your "home made voltage non contact tester", Its amazing how it lights up when its close to something "hot".

  • @ToTheTopCrane
    @ToTheTopCrane Před 6 lety +26

    @ 4:59, took me back to my high school days. We used to blow capacitors up in electronics class when the teacher would venture out of the room. Probably not the wisest thing to do. However, how many of us were wise in high school?

    • @tncorgi92
      @tncorgi92 Před 6 lety +4

      High school is where we went to learn about life while they dumped useless information over our heads.

    • @ToTheTopCrane
      @ToTheTopCrane Před 6 lety +4

      Paul Drake, I now have kids in high school. They still dump useless information over their heads. Actually, more now.

    • @katiebuglj
      @katiebuglj Před 6 lety

      And they got rid of the good stuff. I had trig/analyt in11th and my kids highschool tops out at algebra 2

    • @ToTheTopCrane
      @ToTheTopCrane Před 6 lety

      assassinlexx, how many of your friends did you shock the snot out of? I never thought of doing that? Lol

    • @tb2187
      @tb2187 Před 6 lety +1

      My friend in electric shop put a nail if each side of an outlet, laid his watch across them and powered it up. He didn’t understand why his watch wasn’t “shock proof” when it said it was.
      Not the brightest bulb...

  • @Au70Pi1337
    @Au70Pi1337 Před 6 lety +121

    Ha! I enjoyed the Michael Reeves reference. I wonder if he's a viewer, or better yet, a patron.

    • @arduinoversusevil2025
      @arduinoversusevil2025 Před 6 lety +60

      He hasn't made a vid since the swearing tazer. Lesson learned: never stop swearing.

    • @therealpanse
      @therealpanse Před 6 lety +16

      poor guy is probably still scared of icbms hitting him...

    • @manguydude287
      @manguydude287 Před 6 lety +16

      Patron? He's 13, he spends all his lawn mowing money on mad magazines

    • @JimmysTractor
      @JimmysTractor Před 6 lety +7

      It's no secret that Mike is AvEs nephew.

  • @scotthicks8338
    @scotthicks8338 Před 6 lety

    Electroboom is a great guy! I'm so glad you plugged his channel. It's like going back to Ohm's class again.

  • @silveravnt
    @silveravnt Před 6 lety +1

    Whooosh! that went right over my head which is why that voltage detector is my favorite tool.

  • @tuskerwoodstoneconcepts9282
    @tuskerwoodstoneconcepts9282 Před 6 lety +112

    How much R&D went into the proprietary shape of that home made tester you had there? I'm assuming there was some hands on experience involved in the process?

    • @jesses7507
      @jesses7507 Před 6 lety +9

      Tusker Wood & Stone Concepts probably not that long, he just went with a shape he was familiar with holding onto

    • @harveysmith100
      @harveysmith100 Před 6 lety +1

      Ah yes, I see what you did there

    • @BPollard86
      @BPollard86 Před 6 lety +7

      If in doubt, trace it out.

    • @kylelikeskjvbible
      @kylelikeskjvbible Před 4 lety +2

      He used his favorite tool from the workshop.

  • @Andysanche
    @Andysanche Před 6 lety +19

    With all the electroboom mentions I was hoping for at least a few sparks.

    • @cmans79tr7
      @cmans79tr7 Před 6 lety

      Looked like he was trying when he was connecting to the resistor.

  • @aaronk534
    @aaronk534 Před 6 lety

    I have used many of those. Cheap, expensive, they all get broken in the same time. I would LOVE to use yours on the job. Maybe they wont disappear so frequently. That is great. Love it.

  • @brucewilliams6292
    @brucewilliams6292 Před 6 lety

    That is such a great description! How clever. Thank you !

  • @adnanmlivo5885
    @adnanmlivo5885 Před 6 lety +3

    Best CZcams Community !!

  • @DreamingSheep
    @DreamingSheep Před 6 lety +3

    A bit jealous of the size of your Detect Induction Circuit Knock-off you've got there!

  • @skyking6989
    @skyking6989 Před 3 lety +1

    As an electrican hot sticks saved my life more then once. Even when the circuit is off I always always always hot stick it. I found out that several circuits that were off were still energized!

  • @Osos-man
    @Osos-man Před 5 lety +1

    I laughed the hell out loud when the home made version appeared! I can't come up with anything funnier than what's already in some of the comments about hands on testing etc.. I did wonder however what the conversation was with the better 3\4 on exactly HOW you wanted to build static electricity using her... And did she say no because you would have filmed it? You might should have mentioned that you are an expert at inserting blinding glare with perfect placement to obstruct view...
    You are a genius as far as I care so keep rocking!
    I love knowing what's inside and it's great that you break stuff so I don't have to.. Thanks.

  • @mustie1
    @mustie1 Před 6 lety +112

    you dident stick it in the vise,

    • @BigDizzad
      @BigDizzad Před 6 lety +2

      He kinda did, those pliers are like a handheld vise. x10 force multiplication in yer hands.

    • @raymonroe1983
      @raymonroe1983 Před 6 lety

      Mustie1 lol

    • @888johnmac
      @888johnmac Před 6 lety +4

      Mustie, stop killing time watching you tube videos & get that Jawa fixed... haha

    • @HelloKittyFanMan.
      @HelloKittyFanMan. Před 4 lety

      "Dident"? What's that supposed to mean (to you)?

    • @David-cy5zu
      @David-cy5zu Před 4 lety

      Hello Kitty Lover Man! Fukk aff gremmore natsee

  • @TXHeat1776
    @TXHeat1776 Před 6 lety +36

    A noble amplifier circuit embiggens the smallest signal.

    • @BKHobby
      @BKHobby Před 6 lety +3

      The size of the conductor matters not, but for the motion of the electrons?

  • @jeoffelectron2537
    @jeoffelectron2537 Před 3 lety

    Very fresh I'm glad to see someone still with personality

  • @BarnacleBrown
    @BarnacleBrown Před 6 lety

    That was one of the most full hearted sign offs yet 😂
    Always a blast.

  • @newfieingenuity
    @newfieingenuity Před 6 lety +58

    Hate to be the one to point this out but that home jobby kinda looks a touch phallic, idk if you noticed that.

    • @riaanviljoen8742
      @riaanviljoen8742 Před 6 lety +8

      That home jobby is what impregnates the pixies, hence the ergonomic shape 😂

    • @newfieingenuity
      @newfieingenuity Před 6 lety +2

      I can see how it would fit nicely in the hand.

    • @NoStressVanLife
      @NoStressVanLife Před 6 lety +1

      I was wwondering if anyone else noticed the little Dickens

    • @lysol7204
      @lysol7204 Před 5 lety +2

      Wooosh

    • @HelloKittyFanMan.
      @HelloKittyFanMan. Před 4 lety

      LOL, Newfie, you don't have the slightest idea that AvE is the kind of guy who would do that on purpose? Hahaha!

  • @Seventenitis
    @Seventenitis Před 6 lety +84

    It's a fluke you didn't get electramacuted

    • @Eo_Tunun
      @Eo_Tunun Před 6 lety +1

      Did you mean electroculated?

    • @nbtmx1
      @nbtmx1 Před 6 lety +2

      Electrococulated

  • @mpossjr
    @mpossjr Před 3 lety

    nice tool bud
    You have a great sense of humor and I learned something today. win win

  • @BigDizzad
    @BigDizzad Před 6 lety

    So glad to see the pliers wrench make its debut on yer channel. I was hesitant to spend the dollhairs on mine but now i wouldn't give em up for anything

  • @BKHobby
    @BKHobby Před 6 lety +4

    Are the 4 gold plated contacts on the Fluke meter acting as your capacitor plates? Also, If you're the small capacitor in the circuit, why was it working when you clearly left the Fluke meter in the socket and let go of it? Would that not have broken the circuit?
    Also, quality CZcams buddy!

  • @darikdatta
    @darikdatta Před 6 lety +34

    Schmitts and giggles!

  • @gafasd
    @gafasd Před 6 lety +1

    When I worked as an electritian before I used to buy a load of these from a cheap off-brand manufacturer and keep a bunch on me. And when I encountered a carpenter or plummer who didn't know a lot about electricity I usually gave them a quick tutorial and gave them one of these "pens". I hope it saved some lives or at least made them check pipes or cables before cutting them.

  • @pwgodfrey1
    @pwgodfrey1 Před 6 lety

    OK.... I HAVE USED THESE THINGS FOR YEARS THEN I WANT TO ADMIT, NEVER KNEW OR CARED HOW THEY WORKED. NOW WITH SECONDS LEFT (my analogy for my age) EVERYTHING IS NEW AGAIN! .....NICE PRESENTATION ....THANK YOU

  • @AirCooledPictures
    @AirCooledPictures Před 6 lety +20

    So if we are the ones that are capacitively charged by the ticker why does the ticker still work if i ram it into the receptacle and walk away to find the breaker. I feel like im either missing something or theres more to it.

    • @brokenhalo22
      @brokenhalo22 Před 6 lety +2

      beat me to it. i don't think he's quite right on this one.

    • @mavaddat
      @mavaddat Před 6 lety +1

      The detector is not using your body. It also has nothing to do with capacitance. The transistors are also not amplifying. The transistors are just digitizing the signal to make it either yes/no. www.jameco.com/Jameco/workshop/JamecoFavorites/non-contact-AC-voltage-detector.html

    • @scottmaher6938
      @scottmaher6938 Před 6 lety +3

      It's the continuity testers that use your body as a cap and the second lead. AC "ticks" are inductive I think.

    • @ColtaineCrows
      @ColtaineCrows Před 6 lety

      I always heard these things could go off on a magnet, I haven't had one in years, but I'm pretty sure I used to use one to test solenoid valves back in the day.

    • @nilamotk
      @nilamotk Před 6 lety

      Because it doesnt have to be you. The air itself is a capacitor. The case of the tool is a capacitor. A rock, yup, you guessed it, is a capacitor.

  • @John_Ridley
    @John_Ridley Před 6 lety +25

    I had a Sperry stick for a couple of years. Got it because I needed one right away. It's gahbage. After the thing tried to kill me the 3rd time (said it was not live when it was) I bought a Fluke 1AC. That thing is great. It will tell me what side of an extension cord is the hot wire. The Sperry would sometimes go off when it came near a building in the rain, it would go off for any wire that was anywhere near something hot, then it would not go off when it was touching a bare live wire. Just hopeless.
    Should have bought the Fluke to start with.

    • @nilamotk
      @nilamotk Před 6 lety

      John Ridley You should get a multimeter... 👍 they dont try to kill you as often.

    • @bigmatt7655
      @bigmatt7655 Před 6 lety +4

      That's we electricals call them widowmakers. They have their uses, but never ever trust them 100%

    • @dutchgray86
      @dutchgray86 Před 6 lety

      I find them most useful in finding out which extension lead has gone dud when you have about half dozen daisy chained together.

  • @Suna.X
    @Suna.X Před 4 lety

    i dont know much about this stuff but the way you explain and your style is awesome. loved this video ! sub earned.. elec chicken ...

  • @Inisfad
    @Inisfad Před 6 lety

    I don’t understand a word of this, but your homemade thingo is an absolute hoot.

  • @peterclayton4385
    @peterclayton4385 Před 6 lety +5

    Son of a diddly... Ave has HAIR!

    • @Walking_Death
      @Walking_Death Před 6 lety +5

      He was probably rubbing it on his back.

  • @kirkb4989
    @kirkb4989 Před 6 lety +4

    Is the cardboard shape critical to the operation of your fabricobbled device? Or is it more an indicator of the original person who demanded this vijayo??

    • @CyberlightFG
      @CyberlightFG Před 6 lety +2

      It's the shape of the device he used before.

    • @cmans79tr7
      @cmans79tr7 Před 6 lety

      Ha, yes, that normally is one thing NOT to put into an electrical socket. Oh the irony!

  • @amorphuc
    @amorphuc Před 3 lety

    I hadn't seen this VeJayOh. Damn. Those are some serious Channel Locks there!
    Nice description of stuff too.

  • @Sweeny_de
    @Sweeny_de Před 6 lety

    Something i always wondered about, but couldnt care enough to google.
    Thank you
    Uncle schmoo

  • @thedevilinthecircuit1414
    @thedevilinthecircuit1414 Před 6 lety +8

    Those cascaded transistors to skookumize the gain is called a "Darlington pair"... but you have three! You are out of control... SECURITY!

  • @OttawaOldFart
    @OttawaOldFart Před 6 lety

    I used those at work and I always wondered how they work, thank you.

  • @thespiritof76..
    @thespiritof76.. Před 5 lety +1

    Our resident shop teacher is quite the master in design engineering:-)

  • @robhimself79
    @robhimself79 Před 6 lety +23

    Non contact voltmeter? Why did god give you a tongue then?

  • @labradh
    @labradh Před 6 lety +30

    Put some Scotch tape over your meter screen and get rid of that glare. As it sits, we have to trust that you know how to read numbers... I don't know if I trust you that much.

  • @idriwzrd
    @idriwzrd Před 6 lety

    The ergonomics of your DIY tool are very natural. Looks like it would fall easily to hand.

  • @TheZombieSaints
    @TheZombieSaints Před 6 lety

    LOL ! I was eating breakfast and just about lost a mouthful of food when i first saw the shape of your tester! Thanks for the video AvE and a big THANK YOU for the laugh mate.

  • @brianhilligoss
    @brianhilligoss Před 6 lety +5

    Dang it uncle Bumblefuck. I always thought they where sensing the magnetic field around the wire. Now I have to admit I was wrong to 10’s of people.

    • @jay90374
      @jay90374 Před 6 lety

      LOL - Me to!

    • @Slicerwizard
      @Slicerwizard Před 6 lety

      Not much of a magnetic field around a wire that has no current flowing through it.

  • @buillioncubes
    @buillioncubes Před 6 lety +3

    Can you do a follow up on phantom voltage? The breaker is off but the thing keeps beeping! Til you touch the box that is. Is it picking up something from wires laying over each other or is the user not grounded properly?

    • @bstrickler
      @bstrickler Před 6 lety +1

      buillioncubes this! I had an instance where I was asked to help with figuring out why a dryer wasn't working. It was getting 240 V, even with the power to the house killed. It wouldn't start anything, and when I'd hit the start switch for the dryer, the voltage would vanish, but come right back once I let go.

    • @AirCooledPictures
      @AirCooledPictures Před 6 lety +3

      It is most commonly induced voltage. Ive seen as high as 200 volts induced on a 347/600v system. The thing is there is no load so if you ground it nothing happens. But youll still read the voltage.

    • @buillioncubes
      @buillioncubes Před 6 lety +1

      OK, thanks! Ave's reasoning got me wondering.

    • @phils4634
      @phils4634 Před 6 lety

      Capacitive coupling across the Mains switch. A common problem, especially when your Main Breaker only disconnects phase (not neutral). Most NCD's are so sensitive (high nanoampere sensitive), that they will register any static voltage.

  • @NikovK
    @NikovK Před 6 lety +1

    Just as I'm about to replace all the switches in my house. Thanks AvE!

  • @johngaltline9933
    @johngaltline9933 Před 6 lety

    Love the YTB. Excellent design.

  • @johnelliott3866
    @johnelliott3866 Před 6 lety +5

    I would love to see how a pH meter works

    • @6alecapristrudel
      @6alecapristrudel Před 6 lety +3

      A pH meter has two electrodes. When you dip them in the solution under test (an electrolyte) a voltage develops between them. That voltage is dependent on pH. Confuser then converts voltage into appropriate pH readout.

    • @phils4634
      @phils4634 Před 6 lety

      The electronics are simple (high impedance FET millivoltmeter is all you need - an "off the shelf" cheap meter works fine!). The electrodes are the costly component (though there are cheap ones via the usual Chinese suppliers). If you are looking for an accurate, linear (over a wide range) pH meter - then you're going to have to spend a little more (actually a LOT more), but as always you get what you pay for.

  • @Dabsfordays3
    @Dabsfordays3 Před 6 lety +3

    Uncle Bumblefuck long time listener first time caller. you should make a "Corntac" stickers or shirts

  • @kngofbng
    @kngofbng Před 6 lety

    As a patreon who tosses a single buck into the hat every month, all I demand is that you never cease being this awesome.
    And even if I tossed a thousand, that'd be all I'd demand. It's your fucking life and your fucking channel, you do as you please and it's up to us to enjoy the hell out of it!

  • @ThePoetEmrys
    @ThePoetEmrys Před 6 lety

    Shit man, unlike others I don't want you to adopt me....I want you to teach me an intro class to electric engineering and machining. You manage to make things relatable for the layman better than anyone in youtube

  • @mortlet5180
    @mortlet5180 Před 6 lety +5

    Did you just say electrons move in the one side and holes into the other!?
    I'm sure it was just a slip of the tongue, but in case it wasn't:
    Almost all capacitors use 2 or more metal conductors as their plates (yes, you do get such a thing as semiconductor capacitance, but that is a whole other can of worms and has nothing to do with how electrolytic, film, ceramic, polymer, tantalum, etc. capacitors work).
    Electrons move through the metal as a delocalized 'gas', without any holes being involved.
    Electron holes aren't simply the absence of an electron. Yes a hole is formed in semiconductors when an electron gets promoted into the conduction band, but those conduction electrons don't fall into the hole to 'move' it one space on, as current moves through.
    The moment a conduction electron falls into a hole, it's game over: The hole disappears and the electron becomes a normal bound electron again.
    Holes are their own quantum mechanical objects. They have their own masses, velocities, etc. which are all different from those of electrons in the same semiconductor.

    • @TheDreamHazard
      @TheDreamHazard Před 6 lety +4

      SEMICONDUCTORS ARE MAGIC - my takeaway from studying physics.

    • @mortlet5180
      @mortlet5180 Před 6 lety +3

      DreamHazard; DreamHazard; Electricity is magic: My takeaway from first learning about it in grade school, not finding the explanations satisfactory, becoming annoyed enough to go study electrical engineering after highschool, still not really being OK with the whole thing, and currently, once again studying for an undergraduate degree, but this time in Physics.
      And it isn't even that I couldn't keep up and dropped out or something like that. The most frustrating part is that I have always gotten really good grades. I can't quite describe the feeling of graduating electrical engineering cum laude (which isn't that hard to do if I'm honest. The threshold is set waaay too low in my opinion, but I digress...), but still having no fucking clue what 'electricity' really is. For example:
      Do Cooper pairs 'travelling' through a superconductor also constitute electricity?
      Does the electron really have no size?
      As a simple example: To understand a simple circuit consisting of a DC voltage source, a switch and a lightbulb, you need to understand how (amongst many other things) the EM wave propagates once you close the switch; breaking out of the conductor and travelling along its surface, through the dielectric insulation around the cable.
      Just look at the "travelling through a dielectric" part: This is equivalent to light travelling through a transparent medium with some refractive index > 1. How is the light slowed down, without being otherwise affected?
      How is light generated when a charged particle (say, an electron) travels through the medium, at a speed faster than the phase velocity of light in that medium (basically, how does an electron going through the 'light-barrier' produce an 'optical boom').
      Even when you finally grasp the answers given by the infinite path-integral approach of QED and applying relativity to it, it still leaves very fundamental questions lingering about; such as:
      HOW and WHY does a specific electron actually absorb or emit a photon?
      Is the probabilistic nature of absorbtion/emission the exact same mechanism as that which governs the photon's probabilistic travelling wave-function, which interacts with all possible atoms/particles and paths through the dielectric, or is it just modelled the same.
      Sorry for the long rant. You can probably tell it's an incredibly frustrating subject, which is also very close to my heart.

  • @XanderLuciano
    @XanderLuciano Před 6 lety +13

    "CZcams buddy" eh? Didn't realize uncle bumblefuck watched Michael Reeve

  • @taylorlooney1
    @taylorlooney1 Před 6 lety

    I love these break downs of the magic pixies, its very informative to us electrician neophyte

  • @mitchgrove4086
    @mitchgrove4086 Před 6 lety

    I'm a fan of your familiarity with other youtubers. Also, you're incredibly well-read! It never seizes to amaze me how much shit you know! You hide your genius well.

  • @grhinson
    @grhinson Před 6 lety +9

    How is my lil' comment supposed to be noticed with all these other comments watering the section down?

  • @torstenb5248
    @torstenb5248 Před 6 lety +10

    Did you just call me a capacitor?

  • @navigatorofnone
    @navigatorofnone Před 6 lety

    That is well crafted homemade tester you have. 👍👍👍

  • @sameoldmphymel
    @sameoldmphymel Před 6 lety

    Wow nice tool and it fits the hand perfectly

  • @whatshouldido22
    @whatshouldido22 Před 6 lety +3

    8:38 immediately demonetized.

  • @Nono-hk3is
    @Nono-hk3is Před 6 lety +9

    WHAT? I didn't authorize the use of my bodily capacitance. I'mma sue Tesla Motors (inventors of the Alternating Current, as I am led to believe.)

    • @Ddabig40mac
      @Ddabig40mac Před 6 lety

      I thought Tesla was all about DC and it was Edison and Westinghouse supporting AC.

    • @toddlaplanteVT85
      @toddlaplanteVT85 Před 6 lety +2

      Nope.. Tesla was for AC and Edison was for DC.. Edison tried to show everyone how "dangerous" AC was by electrocuting a pig..

    • @toddlaplanteVT85
      @toddlaplanteVT85 Před 6 lety

      SuperPickle15 yes sorry elephant.. your right my bad

    • @aussiebloke609
      @aussiebloke609 Před 6 lety

      But not related to Tesla Motors, I believe.

    • @nilamotk
      @nilamotk Před 6 lety +4

      No. Lol Nikola Tesla (the person himslf) invented ac. Other have explained the rest.. Tesla motors has both edison and tesla rolling in their graves. "Tesla" branded car running on DC. Lol

  • @zackbarlow
    @zackbarlow Před 6 lety

    You're my hero. I shame all my enginerding friends who don't yet know your saving grace.

  • @jdgower1
    @jdgower1 Před 6 lety

    I've used these volt pens for well over 25 years as an industrial maintenance man and such, and know that they will detect AC voltage whether they are in my hand, or not.
    On numerous occasions, I have just laid the volt pen against a wire and walked away to start flipping circuit breakers to find the breaker to cut the circuit off, with 100% success.
    On several applications of really big wire (like '00' wire and stuff), I have used some 3M Super 33 (truth told, it might have been some cheap "Jap Wrap", but whatev...) to tape the volt pin directly to the hot wire, and it lights in a glorious fashion with no human (or non-human) contact or intervention at all.
    They may indeed rely on some leakage current from a capacitive circuit, but they most assuredly don't rely on you holding them - it's way more subtle than that.
    Tell ya what - make an outlet box on the end of an extension cord and turn the outlet "eye to the sky" up.
    Plug the dick end in, and stick your probe in the small hole (without need for apology of misdirection) of the receptacle, and walk away...
    FAR away...
    It will light up and chirp (if equipped to do so) no matter how far you wander.
    Volt pens don't NEED you, yo! They do their shit whether you're there or not.
    BTW, Santronics made the bomb diggity volt pens, but they got bought out a million years ago, and that sux.

  • @merlinmagnus873
    @merlinmagnus873 Před 6 lety +3

    Be careful you don'd get a VD from that poorly insulated VD.

  • @harrybalzack4451
    @harrybalzack4451 Před 6 lety +3

    AC power Hertz more......60x more¿

    • @CyberlightFG
      @CyberlightFG Před 6 lety

      I tested it and it was just 50 times more.

    • @Fireship1
      @Fireship1 Před 6 lety

      Jet Aircraft power hertz more than that. 400 times more to be exact. Ask me how I know.

  • @tonyhodgson2614
    @tonyhodgson2614 Před 6 lety

    wow there is no one on this planet even close to being like you your special my friend

  • @Blitnock
    @Blitnock Před 6 lety

    Ahh, the Golden Age of CZcams. We're living it!

  • @Guust_Flater
    @Guust_Flater Před 6 lety +29

    I'm a electrichicken. Some say the oldest profession on earth is the.... You know what i mean...🙄😋
    But that is not true, the oldest profession is electrichicken.
    And on day 1 God then separates the light from the dark and names the light “day” and the dark “night.”
    And the week before, we were installing the powercables......😀

    • @ih1206
      @ih1206 Před 6 lety

      Guust that's a good one

    • @CyberlightFG
      @CyberlightFG Před 6 lety +1

      Oh. That was you. Thanks, mate!
      Still working fine every morning.

    • @flyingmaniac3827
      @flyingmaniac3827 Před 6 lety +1

      i am pretty sure prostitute came first, ;)

    • @aussiebloke609
      @aussiebloke609 Před 6 lety +1

      It only took a week to get them up to code? Surely some of the sparkies (usually those with a union buddy) went for a bludge halfway through...

    • @chrisdavidson911
      @chrisdavidson911 Před 6 lety +1

      yea, but she was fakin' it!

  • @kianshahriary7444
    @kianshahriary7444 Před 6 lety +4

    Fackin majic

  • @hopper1
    @hopper1 Před 6 lety

    I had a shit week at work. I was watching this while closing up the shop and when the shop-made tester appeared I laughed my ass off. Thanks for taking the gloom & doom out of my week.

  • @johnmay371
    @johnmay371 Před 3 lety

    Great channel great visual aids !

  • @rockinfaceplant0000
    @rockinfaceplant0000 Před 6 lety

    You sir are a quality human being ..

  • @notapicle
    @notapicle Před 6 lety

    Love the video man. Any chance you could start linking the channels in the description you shout out ?

  • @keithmartell3971
    @keithmartell3971 Před 6 lety

    You are the best, Thank you and keep them coming :)

  • @UncleMark1
    @UncleMark1 Před 6 lety +1

    Great vid as usual, gotta know who makes those compound pliers?

  •  Před 6 lety +1

    This made my brain warm.

  • @rhkips
    @rhkips Před 6 lety

    I learned SO MUCH from this one silly little video.

  • @fastamx069box8
    @fastamx069box8 Před 6 lety

    Ave, Buddy..! First person in a long time that's used the H word.. Yes, you said Holes. The absence of an electronic. You got me salivating like a young puppy again.
    Thank you, P.S. Let's see what school of thought you were raised in. Do holes move electron to electron, or do electrons move hole to hole. Absolutely wonderful, wonderful edumacation you're handing down to these Young Bucks.

  • @GMONEYFIFTYFOUR
    @GMONEYFIFTYFOUR Před 3 lety

    I didn’t laugh because I was so curious on how these worked. But once you help your unit it just became hilarious 👍

  • @dfd277
    @dfd277 Před 6 lety

    You owe me a beer because of 8:38 AvE!

  • @carlwitt7950
    @carlwitt7950 Před 6 lety

    So weird that you mention "electroboom". I just discovered him a week ago, and he hilarious.
    I hope he gets a 100k sub boom from your mention. He deserves it.

  • @tehslackz0r
    @tehslackz0r Před 6 lety

    That is awesome, i always wondered how those detectors worked. I have a old school detector that has no on/off button. another fun trick is to hold on to a hot wire (while not grounded) and hold on to the detector. Then if you get close enough to someone with the detector it would light up as it normally would if you found a hot wire. Those things are life savers. Also to generate static you could just rub the detector across your arm quickly and it should light up.

  • @phredtoo2
    @phredtoo2 Před 2 lety

    Wow! Very educational!